Hi im new and I need to store some information I typed at school somewhere so I can access it at home. All emails are blocked and this is the only forum, so please leave this up for 4 hrs and I will delete. Thx for your patience/help!
Episodic memory- Memory of events that we have experienced
Semantic memory- Memory where facts, figures, and general knowledge is stored
Flashbulb memory- A very deep, vivid memory in the form of a visual image associated with a particularly arousing event
Phonemes- The smallest units of speech sounds in a given language that are still distinctly different
Morphemes- Combinations of phonemes that form the smallest semantically meaningful parts of language
Syntax- The set of rules used for the arrangement of morphemes into meaningful sentences
Telegraphic speech- Two or three word groups
Concept- A way of grouping or classifying the world around us
Prototype- A quintessential example of a given object/category
Reasoning- The drawing of conclusions from evidence
Heuristic- Using intuitive rules of thumb to solve a problem that may or may not be useful in a given situation
Algorithm- Solving a problem through use of systematical, mechanical approaches that eventually guarantee an answer.
Functional fixedness- A tendency to assume that a given item is only useful for the task for which it was designed
Confirmation bias- Searching for information that supports a particular view, a hindrance to problem solving
Belief perseverance- Seeing only evidence that supports a particular position
Framing- The way a question was phrased
Creativity- The process of producing something novel, yet worthwhile.
Episodic memory- Memory of events that we have experienced
Semantic memory- Memory where facts, figures, and general knowledge is stored
Flashbulb memory- A very deep, vivid memory in the form of a visual image associated with a particularly arousing event
Phonemes- The smallest units of speech sounds in a given language that are still distinctly different
Morphemes- Combinations of phonemes that form the smallest semantically meaningful parts of language
Syntax- The set of rules used for the arrangement of morphemes into meaningful sentences
Telegraphic speech- Two or three word groups
Concept- A way of grouping or classifying the world around us
Prototype- A quintessential example of a given object/category
Reasoning- The drawing of conclusions from evidence
Heuristic- Using intuitive rules of thumb to solve a problem that may or may not be useful in a given situation
Algorithm- Solving a problem through use of systematical, mechanical approaches that eventually guarantee an answer.
Functional fixedness- A tendency to assume that a given item is only useful for the task for which it was designed
Confirmation bias- Searching for information that supports a particular view, a hindrance to problem solving
Belief perseverance- Seeing only evidence that supports a particular position
Framing- The way a question was phrased
Creativity- The process of producing something novel, yet worthwhile.
